If you use the same password for multiple systems—online shopping, email, your company’s cloud bookkeeping solution, etc.—you’re not alone. Even Facebook founder Mark Zuckerburg did that. And in 2016 his LinkedIn credentials were compromised in a major breach. That gave hackers access to his Twitter account, too, because the passwords were the same.
The fact is, with
just one user password, hackers can often break into multiple applications and
systems. Your whole business can very quickly be put at risk. That’s why a good
security practice is to have a different, strong password for every account. A breach
will be isolated to that account, and the fallout will be much smaller and
easier to manage.
Be extra protective
of your sensitive accounts
When it comes to
ultra-sensitive accounts like company servers or your banking apps, make extra
sure the password you use isn’t one you’ve used anywhere else. Banks usually have
strong security measures, but even those won’t protect you if someone tries a
password you’ve used somewhere else and it works. The consquences could be disastrous.
Email is another
big one to safeguard—work and personal. If someone gets into your email, the
potential for damage goes up exponentially. They can send out phishing,
ransomware, or other malicious attacks to any or all of your contacts, and they’ll
seem legitimate because they’ve come directly from you.
Be unique and
strong
Of course, in
addition to being unique, your passwords have to be strong, too. At a minimum,
that means making each one long. Pick one with at least eight
characters, but the longer the better. If you can use phrases of multiple words
instead of a single word, that’s even better still. (And for goodness’ sake,
don’t use “password”.)
So why don’t more people use unique, strong passwords for every account? Usually because they feel like it’s too much work. If you have dozens or hundreds of accounts, having a different password for each one might seem like a royal pain. And long, complex passwords are definitely hard if not impossible to remember. Fortunately, there are solutions to help manage passwords for you so your brain (or an insecure notebook or spreadsheet) doesn’t have to do all the work. Having the right tools is just as important as having the right practices in place.
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